On the left of the picture, meanwhile, English fireships set out towards the approaching Armada. |
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The ships were two of the 20-24 Spanish Armada ships that were wrecked off the Irish coastline out of a total fleet of 130 ships. |
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Very high in protein, beestings is used in Spain for the production of Armada, a strong, semi-firm cheese. |
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The superior firepower provided by bronze cannonry proved crucial in the English navy's victory in 1588 over the much larger Spanish Armada. |
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It is plain that her own propaganda, her sheer longevity and the defeat of the Armada have beguiled us into ignoring the problems of her reign. |
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After the Armada campaign Howard continued to serve as Lord High Admiral in major expeditions afloat. |
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The latest in the occasional Another Late Night series raids the record collection of icebox studio duo Groove Armada. |
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A year later, secure in the north, Gloriana's licensed pirates in their gun-crammed galleons, aided by a storm, saw off the Spanish Armada. |
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The English drove in hard and close, pouring broadsides into the Armada, though they still could not break its formation. |
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At this point the English sent in fireships and the Armada scattered in disarray. |
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The bilboes are still shown in the Tower of London, among the other spoils of the Spanish Armada. |
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Once in the English Channel the Armada arrayed itself in a defensive formation, much like an army in line of battle. |
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The Gloria moved into position among the other redemption class ships, or gunboats based on the original design of the man-o-war of the British Armada. |
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Centuries later the Elizabethans and Jacobeans thought of Sluys as a historical precursor to the Spanish Armada. |
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Thus Queen Elizabeth I's rousing declamation to her troops at Tilbury in 1588 falls into this category since it is hinged to the crisis of the Spanish Armada. |
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The first bearer of the name Reynolds came to our shores with the Spanish Armada and the galleon on which he travelled was wrecked on the North coast of Sligo. |
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Fleeing with other demoralized shreds of the Spanish Armada, the galley had sailed up the eastern coast of England, driven on ahead of the English fleet by gales and storms. |
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Again, a very rare popular woodcut dates from after the Spanish Armada of 1588 when images of the Queen were used as emblems to rally national pride. |
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Even so, the dozen U.S. warships on station were the biggest contingent in this Armada. |
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That night, in order to execute their attack, the English tacked upwind of the Armada, thus gaining the weather gage, a significant advantage. |
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At daybreak on 21 July the English fleet engaged the Armada off Plymouth near the Eddystone rocks. |
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It took an entire day for the English fleet to regroup and the Armada gained a day's grace. |
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On 23 July the English fleet and the Armada engaged once more, off Portland. |
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At the critical moment Medina Sidonia sent reinforcements south and ordered the Armada back to open sea to avoid The Owers shoals. |
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However, to get to the Armada, they would have to cross the zone dominated by the Dutch navy, where the Armada could not go. |
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In fact, evidence from Armada wrecks in Ireland shows that much of the fleet's ammunition was never spent. |
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This also enabled them to maintain a position to windward so that the heeling Armada hulls were exposed to damage below the water line. |
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In September 1588 the Armada sailed around Scotland and Ireland into the North Atlantic. |
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Reports of the passage of the remnance of the Spanish Armada around Ireland abound with onerous accounts of hardships and survival. |
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Spanish naval power not only continued its hegemony in the key trade routes but also in the creation of the Armada de Barlovento. |
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The Armada Memorial in Plymouth was constructed in 1888 to celebrate the tercentenary of the defeat of the Spanish Armada. |
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At the time of the Spanish Armada in 1588, the daily allowance on board a Royal Navy ship was one pound of biscuit plus one gallon of beer. |
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The Armada Jewel, given by Elizabeth to Sir Thomas Heneage and the Drake Pendant given to Sir Francis Drake are the best known examples. |
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In 1962 many of her books were among the first to be published by Armada Books in paperback, making them more affordable to children. |
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One popular speculation suggests the Black Irish are descendants of survivors of the Spanish Armada, despite research discrediting such claims. |
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To promote I Created Disco, Harris embarked on a tour of the UK, supporting Faithless and Groove Armada. |
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The period after the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 brought new difficulties for Elizabeth that lasted until the end of her reign. |
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Two days later the Spanish Armada sailed from Lisbon but was forced back into port by bad winds. |
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On 19 July Howard received the news that the Armada had been seen off Lizard Point, Cornwall. |
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Howard commissioned the Italian writer Petruccio Ubaldini to write a chronicle on the defeat of the Armada. |
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A mixed force as he saw it would suffer the same fate as the Spanish Armada. |
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Chronicler Gaspar Correia asserts that on the outward voyage, the Third Armada made a stop on the Brazilian coast around Cape Santo Agostinho. |
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So it is possible that the Third Armada may indeed have discovered Fernando de Noronha island on their outward leg. |
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Surrounding the whole castle are large earthworks, designed by the Italian Federigo Gianibelli, and begun in the year before the Spanish Armada. |
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The Ottomans rebuilt the weak walls of Jeddah in 1525 following their victory over the Lopo Soares de Albergaria's Armada in the Red Sea. |
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Because of financial problems, Cervantes worked as a purveyor for the Spanish Armada, and later as a tax collector. |
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The first India Armada, commanded by Vasco da Gama, arrived in Portugal in the summer of 1499, in a rather sorry shape. |
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On the orders of King Manuel I of Portugal, arrangements immediately began to assemble a Second Armada in Cascais. |
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Shortly after, three more ships of the 2nd Armada sail into Mozambique island and make junction with Cabral. |
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He died at sea, possibly off the coast of Mozambique, while returning from India in the 5th Portuguese Armada with Francisco de Albuquerque. |
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They returned to Spain in 1536 in the Portuguese India Armada and under Portuguese guard. |
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In 1588, he sent a fleet, the Spanish Armada, to rendezvous with the Duke of Parma's army and convey it across the English Channel. |
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The defeat of the Spanish Armada gave great heart to the Protestant cause across Europe. |
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It was built in 1577 at sixty tons, and was part of the English fleet that defeated the Spanish Armada. |
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In 1588, during the Elizabethan period, an English fleet under Francis Drake defeated an invading Spanish Armada. |
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Dartmouth sent numerous ships to join the English fleet that attacked the Spanish Armada, including the Roebuck, Crescent and Hart. |
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English Navy squibs set fire to two dozen enemy ships in a Dutch harbor during the 16th century battle against the Spanish Armada. |
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An Armada of sand crabs hefting a landlocked ship on their backs. |
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Alternatively, a piece of local folklore once suggested that it came from a wrecked Spanish Armada ship. |
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After the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 there was a huge expansion of maritime trade. |
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Thirty years later, he sent the Spanish Armada to overthrow her, without success. |
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England's defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 associated Elizabeth with one of the greatest military victories in English history. |
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She was portrayed as Belphoebe or Astraea, and after the Armada, as Gloriana, the eternally youthful Faerie Queene of Edmund Spenser's poem. |
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In 1588, hoping to put a stop to Elizabeth's intervention, Philip sent the Spanish Armada to invade England. |
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The first delay came when Queen Elizabeth I ordered all vessels to remain at port for potential use against the Spanish Armada. |
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After England's 1588 victory over the Spanish Armada, the ships were given permission to sail. |
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In the Armada year of 1588, Raleigh had some involvement with defence against the Spanish at Devon. |
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Drake's ship had been leading the English pursuit of the Armada by means of a lantern. |
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In 1589, the year after defeating the Armada, Drake and Sir John Norreys were given three tasks. |
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While awaiting communications from the Duke of Parma's army the Armada was scattered by an English fireship attack. |
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The Armada managed to regroup and, driven by southwest winds, withdrew north, with the English fleet harrying it up the east coast of England. |
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The King was supported by Pope Sixtus V, who treated the invasion as a crusade, with the promise of a subsidy should the Armada make land. |
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On 28 May 1588, the Armada set sail from Lisbon and headed for the English Channel. |
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On the day the Armada set sail, Elizabeth's ambassador in the Netherlands, Valentine Dale, met Parma's representatives in peace negotiations. |
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The English made a vain effort to intercept the Armada in the Bay of Biscay. |
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On 20 July the English fleet was off Eddystone Rocks, with the Armada upwind to the west. |
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The storm that smashed the Armada was seen by many of Philip's enemies as a sign of the will of God. |
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Bernard's eldest brother was George Gilpin who was commissioned by Queen Elizabeth I to form an alliance between the Dutch States and the English against the Spanish Armada. |
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The Spanish Armada suffered defeat at the hands of the English in 1588 and the situation in the Netherlands became increasingly difficult to manage. |
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The 4th Armada would be placed under the command of Vasco da Gama. |
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Although Cabral was initially offered the command of the 4th Armada, scheduled for 1502, it seemed more like a pro forma gesture than a sincere offer. |
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Comparing notes, it probably dawned on Vespucci that it was simply impossible to square what he knew of the Americas with what the men of the 2nd Armada knew of Asia. |
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In the Azores, the Islands Armada protected the ships en route to Lisbon. |
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Standing in the way of the Allies was the English Channel, an obstacle that had frustrated the ambitions of the Spanish Armada and Napoleon Bonaparte's Navy. |
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La Girona1588, Lacada Point, County Antrim A GALLEASS of the Spanish Armada had taken on 800 survivors from two other wrecks only to sink in a gale. |
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He also commissioned a Flemish artist, Hendrick Cornelisz Vroom, to make a series of tapestries on the Armada, based on Augustine Ryther's engravings. |
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Peace negotiations continued until the Armada was sailing for England. |
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Hilliard's Armada, Gresley, Phoenix and Drake pieces are masterpieces of the jewelled locket, their precious materials, imprese and mottoes encoded with hidden meanings. |
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During the Spanish Armada of 1597, a Spanish ship, the Bear of Amsterdam missed her objective at Milford Haven and ended up having entered the Dyfi estuary. |
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Although England was not by then engaged in land operations against Spain, the two countries were still at war, and the Spanish Armada of 1588 was only five years in the past. |
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An example of this nationalism can be seen in Lord Chancellor Sir Christopher Hatton's opening speech to Parliament in 1589 in the aftermath of the defeat of the Armada. |
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The following year Elizabeth I launched the Counter Armada, under Sir Francis Drake, but it was unsuccessful in its goals, resulting in Spain retaining naval superiority. |
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The English fleet was still cautious of the remaining Armada after the Battle of Gravelines, requiring it to remain on duty even as some of its sailors died. |
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These barges would be protected by the large ships of the Armada. |
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Superior English ships and seamanship foiled the invasion and led to the destruction of the Spanish Armada in 1588, marking the high point of Elizabeth's reign. |
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Soon after the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588, London merchants presented a petition to Queen Elizabeth I for permission to sail to the Indian Ocean. |
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The period after the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 brought new difficulties for Elizabeth that lasted the fifteen years until the end of her reign. |
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